He began to make little jokes, the sort
that schoolboys like—mnemonics and puns that raised laughs and at the
same time imprinted something in the mind. There was one that never failed to
please, though it was only a sample of many others. Whenever his Roman
History forms came to deal with the Lex Canuleia, the law that permitted
patricians to marry plebeians, Chips used to add: “So that, you see, if Miss
Plebs wanted Mr. Patrician to marry her, and he said he couldn’t, she
probably replied: ‘Oh yes, you can, you liar!’” Roars of laughter.
And Kathie broadened his views and opinions, also, giving him an outlook
far beyond the roofs and turrets of Brookfield, so that he saw his country as
something deep and gracious to which Brookfield was but one of many feeding
streams. She had a cleverer brain than his, and he could not confuse her
ideas even if and when he disagreed with them; he remained, for instance, a
Conservative in politics, despite all her radical-socialist talk. But even
where he did not accept, he absorbed; her young idealism worked upon his
maturity to produce an amalgam very gentle and wise.
Sometimes she persuaded him completely. Brookfield, for example, ran a
mission in East London, to which boys and parents contributed generously with
money but rarely with personal contact. It was Katherine who suggested that a
team from the mission should come up to Brookfield and play one of the
School’s elevens at soccer. The idea was so revolutionary that from anyone
but Katherine it could not have survived its first frosty reception. To
introduce a group of slum boys to the serene pleasaunces of better-class
youngsters seemed at first a wanton stirring of all kinds of things that had
better be left untouched. The whole staff was against it, and the School, if
its opinion could have been taken, was probably against it too. Everyone was
certain that the East End lads would be hooligans, or else that they would be
made to feel uncomfortable; anyhow, there would be “incidents,” and everyone
would be confused and upset. Yet Katherine persisted.
“Chips,” she said, “they’re wrong, you know, and I’m right. I’m looking
ahead to the future, they and you are looking back to the past. England isn’t
always going to be divided into officers and ‘other ranks.’ And those Poplar
boys are just as important—to England—as Brookfield is. You’ve
got to have them here, Chips. You can’t satisfy your conscience by writing a
check for a few guineas and keeping them at arm’s length. Besides, they’re
proud of Brookfield—just as you are. Years hence, maybe, boys of that
sort will be coming here—a few of them, at any rate. Why not? Why ever
not? Chips, dear, remember this is eighteen-ninety-seven—not
sixty-seven, when you were up at Cambridge. You got your ideas well stuck in
those days, and good ideas they were too, a lot of them. But a few—
just a few, Chips—want unsticking…”
Rather to her surprise, he gave way and suddenly became a keen advocate of
the proposal, and the volte-face was so complete that the authorities were
taken unawares and found themselves consenting to the dangerous experiment.
The boys from Poplar arrived at Brookfield one Saturday afternoon, played
soccer with the School’s second team, were honorably defeated by seven goals
to five, and later had high tea with the School team in the Dining Hall. They
then met the Head and were shown over the School, and Chips saw them off at
the railway station in the evening. Everything had passed without the
slightest hitch of any kind, and it was clear that the visitors were taking
away with them as fine an impression as they had left behind.
They took back with them also the memory of a charming woman who had met
them and talked to them; for once, years later, during the War, a private
stationed at a big military camp near Brookfield called on Chips and said he
had been one of that first visiting team. Chips gave him tea and chatted with
him, till at length, shaking hands, the man said: “And ‘ow’s the missus, sir?
I remember her very well.”
“Do you?” Chips answered, eagerly. “Do you remember her?”
“Rather. I should think anyone would.”
And Chips replied: “They don’t, you know. At least, not here. Boys come
and go; new faces all the time; memories don’t last. Even masters don’t stay
forever.
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